The Shifted Librarian - Shifting Libraries at the speed of byte
 Wednesday, November 20, 2002

Google your life. MSFT's new project takes all of your life experiences and puts them in an unstructured database, making a searchable record of your life. I imagine this will including your GPS readings as you walk around, the RFIDs your PDA logs, the numbers you call and the numbers that call you:
It is part of a curious venture dubbed the MyLifeBits project, in which engineers at Microsoft's Media Presence lab in San Francisco are aiming to build multimedia databases that chronicle people's life events and make them searchable. "Imagine being able to run a Google-like search on your life," says Gordon Bell, one of the developers.

The motivation? Microsoft argues that our memories often deceive us: experiences get exaggerated, we muddle the timing of events and simply forget stuff. Much better, says the firm, to junk such unreliable interpretations and instead build a faithful memory on that most reliable of entities, the PC.

Bell and his colleagues developed MyLifeBits as a surrogate brain to solve what they call the "giant shoebox problem". "In a giant shoebox full of photos, it's hard to find what you are looking for," says Microsoft's Jim Gemmell. Add to this the reels of home movies, videotapes, bundles of letters and documents we file away, and remembering what we have, let alone finding it, becomes a major headache." Link Discuss (Thanks, Will!) [Boing Boing Blog]

Plus The Coming Memex.

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 Monday, November 18, 2002

Papers from KMWorld and Intranets 2002. A selection of papers and presentations has been published from the recent KMWorld & Intranets 2002 conferences held October 28-31, 2002 in Santa Clara, California. This will continue to grow as presenters get round to uploading their files.... [Column Two]
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